Categorias: Todos - literacy - assessment - strategies - writing

por Skalinski Skalinski 3 anos atrás

197

Literacy Development Shawn Skalinski

Effective literacy development involves a variety of reading and writing strategies tailored to enhance a student's reading comprehension and writing skills. Reading techniques include teacher read-alouds, student read-alouds, interactive storytelling, and repeated reading to model prosody and improve phonetical awareness.

Literacy Development Shawn Skalinski

References

References:

Beck, I. L., & McKeown, M. G. (2001). Text talk: Capturing the benefits of read-aloud experiences for young children. The Reading Teacher55, 10-20.


Faver, S. (2008). Repeated reading of poetry can enhance reading fluency. Reading Teacher62(4), 350-352.


Fisher, D. & Frey, N. (2015). Selecting Texts and Tasks for Content Area Reading and Learning. Reading Teacher, 68(7), 524-529. DOI: 10.1002/trtr.1344


Graham, S., & Harris, K. R. (2016). A path to better writing: Evidence-based practices in the classroom. The Reading Teacher, 69, 359-365. DOI: 10.1002/trtr.1432


Harris, K. R., Graham, S., Friedlander, B., & Laud, L. (2013). Bring powerful writing strategies into your classroom! The Reading Teacher, 66, 538-542.DOI: 10.1002/TRTR.1156


Knatim. Summarization 6 reciprocal teaching pt 1. YouTube. (2009, March 4). https://youtu.be/8oXskcnb4RA


Lane, H. B., & Allen, S. A. (2010). The vocabulary rich classroom: Modeling sophisticated word use to promote word consciousness and vocabulary growth. The Reading Teacher63, 362-370. 


Mayer, R. (2008). Learning to write. In R. Mayer, Learning and Instruction (2nd. Ed. pp. 120-151) Upper Saddle River: Pearson.


McKeown, M. G., Beck, I. L. (2011). Making vocabulary interventions engaging and effective. In R. E. O’Conner, & P.F. Vadasy, (Eds.). Handbook of reading interventions (pp. 138-168). New York, NY: Guilford Press.


Pollard-Durodola, S., & Gonzalez, J. E., Simmons, D. C., Davis, M. J., Simmons, L., & Nava-Walichowski, M. (2011). Using knowledge networks to develop preschoolers’ content vocabulary. The Reading Teacher, 65(4), 265-274. DOI: 10.1002/TRTR.01035


Rasinski, T. V., & Samuels, S. J. (2011). Reading fluency: What it is and what it is not. In S. J. Samuels & A. E. Farstrup (Eds.), What research has to say about reading instruction (4th ed., pp. 94-114). Newark, DE: International Reading Association.


Reading Rockets. (2014, April 16). Reading as Dialogue [Video].  YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yNi2huTBaP8


Stahl, K. A. D. (2004). Proof, practice, and promise: Comprehension strategy instruction in the primary grades. The Reading Teacher57, 598-609.



(new learnings and reflections in yellow boxes and connection lines)

Literacy Development Shawn Skalinski

Reading

Morphology
guided reading
read aloud
Repeated Reading (Faver, 2008)
interactive storytelling
student read aloud
teacher read aloud

model prosody (Rasinski, 2011)

independent reading
Just Right Books
shared reading
Subtopic
reading conferences
running records
levelled reading
readers workshop
phonetical awareness
decoding
reading comprehension
Content areas

vocabulary and concepts built around thematic units (Pollard et al., 2011)

information and narrative text concept and vocabulary combination (Pollard et al., 2011)

Text consideration (Fisher, 2015)
Teacher-led questioning

QAR approach (Stahl, 2004)

On My Own

Author and You

Think and Search

Right There

lower to higher order questioning

Reciprocal Teaching ((Knatim, 2009)

clarifying

summarizing

retelling
visualising
visible thinking strategies
questioning
predicting
recall
inferencing

Main topic

Speaking

Read alouds
Dialogic Thinking (Reading Rockets, 2014)
Text Talk: (Beck & McKeown, 2015)

Writing

assessment
writing conferences
writing rubrics
presentation
writer's workshop
writing process

3 components (Mayer, 2008)

reviewing

detection and correction of errors, internalize revision process

translation

converting ideas into words

planning

development of organization and generation of content

students write about topics they know about or have researched (Mayer, 2008)

30 minutes a day (Graham and Harris, 2016)

self-regulating the writing process (Harris et al., 2013)

Goal setting SRSD (Harris et al., 2013)

publishing

excellent ends

magnificent middles

brilliant beginnings

on demand prompt

author's circle
sentence fluency
vocabulary development
opportunities to apply new language (Land & Allen, 2010)
enhanced language as year progresses (Land & Allen, 2010)
explicitly taught -- ex. Sample Instructional Sequence (McKeown and Beck, 2011).
idea development
conventions
punctuation
grammar
spelling

structured word inquiry

marker vowels

morphemes

matrices

suffixes

prefixes

bases

bound bases

etymology

phonemes

graphemes

single letter graphemes

digraphs

trigraphs